Showing posts with label easy rawlins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label easy rawlins. Show all posts

Friday, January 31, 2014

Crime is the High Road to Philosophy

 
Walter Mosley, who visits the Writers Institute on Tues. Feb. 4th, was the subject of a memorable profile more than two decades ago in the New York Times:

Crime is the high road to philosophy for Walter Mosley. In fact, what draws him to write mysteries is the chance to attack moral questions, and the novel that has most affected his writing and his outlook is not a crime story but ''The Stranger'' by the French existentialist Albert Camus.

''Mysteries, stories about crime, about detectives, are the ones that really ask the existentialist questions,'' he says, ''such as 'How do I act in an imperfect world when I want to be perfect?' I'm not really into clues and that sort of thing, although I do put them in my stories. I like the moral questions.'' Mr. Mosley's sometimes mischievous humor is habitually expressed in understatement. The ''imperfect world'' in which ''Devil in a Blue Dress'' is set is the Watts section of Los Angeles in the late 1940's. It is an area where policemen and rotten politicians are presiding menaces but no more dangerous to ordinary citizens like Easy Rawlins than some of his neighbors and friends.

More:  http://www.nytimes.com/books/98/11/15/specials/mosley-moral.html

More about Mosley's visit with Frankie Bailey:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/mosley_bailey14.html

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Walter Mosley Brings Easy Rawlins Back from the Grave

 
Bestselling crime fiction author Walter Mosley, who visits UAlbany this coming Tuesday, 2/4, brings
back his iconic detective "Easy Rawlins," who drove his car over a cliff some years ago, to star in a new mystery novel set in Los Angeles during the heyday of "Flower Power."

More about Mosley's upcoming visit with crime author and UAlbany professor Frankie Bailey: http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/vws.html#walter

R. A. Brooks Sr. has a review in Black Books and Reviews:

"Powered by some weird concoction called Gator’s Blood given to him by good friend and conjure woman Mama Jo, [Rawlins'] latest journey takes him to the Los Angeles hippie culture and community in 1967. It is a world of free love, psychedelic drugs and for the first time since his days as a soldier in World War II France, Rawlins sees a truly color-blind world."

"But once he steps back outside that world, all the demons, evil and racism remain, stronger than ever. There are the racist cops who want to arrest and destroy him, and the racist thugs who want to kill him. And, oh, the black thugs too."

More:  http://blackbooksandreviews.com/little-green-an-easy-rawlins-mystery-by-walter-mosley/

Picture:  Denzel Washington as Easy Rawlins in the movie adaptation of the first mystery in the series, Devil in a Blue Dress.

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